The State of Israel will not agree to live under constant threats like those
emerging from the ongoing upheaval in the Middle East, IDF Chief of Staff
Lt.-Gen. Benny Gantz declared Tuesday night during the official state
Remembrance Day ceremony at the Western Wall.

Gantz spoke just minutes
after sirens sounded throughout the country at 8 p.m. and people bowed
their heads to mourn the 22,993 soldiers who have fallen in defense of Israel
since 1860 – the year the first Jews left Jerusalem’s Old City walls to settle
other parts of the country.

Your sons and daughters will not return to you or to us

Who never knew the taste of love

Their bravery has left us alive, but their deaths have left us broken

We are able to gather the necessary strength

to win every battle

to distance enemies from our borders

and to bring peace upon the State of Israel

In the past year, 126 soldiers and security
personnel died in service of the state. On Wednesday, the main memorial will
take place at Jerusalem’s Mount Herzl Military Cemetery.

A two-minute
siren will sound at 11 a.m., and ceremonies will take place at an additional 44
cemeteries around the country.

The Defense Ministry said it expects over
1.5 million people to visit the cemeteries throughout the day.

“After the
fog of the revolutions began to settle, we began to see a different Middle East
presenting new challenges,” Gantz said. “In this new, dubious reality, we
witness attempts by our enemies, both far and near, to harm everything we’ve
built.”

He used his speech also to stress the importance of serving in
the IDF.

“We have an obligation to overcome the social gaps, to stand
united and to serve in the military. Only this way will we be prepared for every
challenge,” he said.

President Shimon Peres, who spoke just before Gantz,
tried to comfort the bereaved families and said that the country’s amazing
achievements were the results of their personal sacrifices.

“Your sons
and daughters will not return to you... Their bravery has left us alive, but
their deaths have left us broken,” he said.

Earlier, Prime Minister
Binyamin Netanyahu addressed more than 200 soldiers and bereaved families
gathered Tuesday for the Yad LeBanim Memorial for the Fallen in Israel’s
Wars.

“For bereaved families, time stops when you get the terrible
news... it cuts your life in two: what was before, and what will never be
again,” he said. “When you hear the siren tonight, we will turn into one family,
and the citizens of Israel will be united in our remembrance.”

Joining
him at the ceremony were chief rabbis Yona Metzger and Shlomo Amar, as well as
Knesset Speaker Reuven Rivlin and representatives of the police, army and Home
Front Command.

Yad LeBanim (“A Memorial for the Sons”) is the
organization that supports bereaved families in cooperation with the Defense
Ministry and official government bodies. The Jerusalem memorial, located near
the government quarter, is the central memorial for soldiers killed in action in
the capital.

Netanyahu spoke to the bereaved families as “my sisters and
brothers,” drawing on his own experience of losing his brother Yonatan in the
1976 Entebbe rescue mission.

For us, the bereaved families

time stops at the moment we receive the bitter news

a cruel sword has cut our lives to two

and what was before, will never be again

but on this day, the entire nation stops and stands silent

When you hear the siren tonight,

we will turn into one family

and the citizens of Israel will be united in our remembrance

they will bow their heads, in gratitute to those who fell

and sacrificed their lives in defence of our nation

Nava Cohen, who lost her brother in the Yom
Kippur War and her son in Hebron during the second intifada, spoke on behalf of
the bereaved families.

“We are always looking for more parts of our son,”
she said. “We’re always trying to gather another sentence, another memory,
another photograph, so that we can continue to live with our son.”

Cohen
said the hardest part was following the chain of photographs – from childhood
through school and bike trips and finally to the soldier in uniform – until the
photos stop abruptly.

“Today, memorial day, is a day when all of Israel
is united in the remembrance of these soldiers,” she said.

“Every story,
from every soldier, is a story of his life and also a story of the nation of
Israel.”

She also pleaded with the Defense Ministry not to combine the
branch that supports bereaved families with other government ministries, where
it could be overlooked.

The prime minister will speak at both the
official Wednesday morning ceremony for the fallen, and the state ceremony for
the victims of terrorism in Israel and abroad.

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